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Updated 12 months ago on . Most recent reply
![Scott Johnson's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/1430532/1636122533-avatar-sdjohnso.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/crop=866x866@0x0/cover=128x128&v=2)
Would you buy a property receiving under market rents?
I'm looking at a duplex that has tenants in place. Each unit is rented for around $800, but market rents are $1500. The leases end in October and August, so if I were to buy it with a loan I would eat a part of the mortgage for four months on one property and six months on another. In order to get to the higher market rent, certain updates we need to be made to the units. The duplex has been hanging on the market for a while, likely to the aforementioned leases being in place.
My questions are:
Would this be an opportunity you would look into buying, and why?
How do you handle the updates?
How would you handle the tenants?
Thanks so much!
- Scott Johnson
- [email protected]
Most Popular Reply
![Kyle Joseph's profile image](https://bpimg.biggerpockets.com/no_overlay/uploads/social_user/user_avatar/744931/1708994353-avatar-kylej48.jpg?twic=v1/output=image/crop=205x205@93x47/cover=128x128&v=2)
Yes, I would look at this deal. If the in-place rents generate don't generate enough cashflow to cover your debt service, you'll want to plan to bring additional equity to the deal to cover the shortfalls. And even if you have enough cashflow to cover debt service, you may not hit typical bank lender DSCR covenants. Check with your lender to make sure they are comfortable lending with this period of 3-6 months where your cashflow is light.
In terms of updates and tenants, it sounds like you may have time to complete them at the end of each lease expiration. So when lease 1 expires in August, ask the tenant to pay $1,500 (or whatever you would be satisfied with) or vacate. If they vacate, do your renos and have the unit rented by October. Once that unit is filled, do the next one. That way you have some rent coming in at all times. If it's a really tight rental market, these tenants may be willing to pay more in rent and you can defer when you need to do the updates.
Happy to look at some numbers with you if helpful, just let me know.